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The Turn of the Screw.
Henry James’s gothic novella traps a young governess, two children, and a country house inside one of literature’s most unnerving studies in ambiguity, repression, and dread.
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Edition details
- Henry James
- DotBooks
- DotBooks
- Paperback
- Standard white
- 126
- en
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About this book
The Turn of the Screw is one of the essential works of gothic fiction: a compact, unnerving novella in which a governess arrives at a remote English estate and becomes convinced that two children in her care are exposed to a terrible supernatural influence. Henry James builds the story through suggestion, withheld certainty, and the slow pressure of fear, leaving readers to decide how much belongs to haunting, how much to repression, and how much to the mind itself.
Themes
James turns the country-house ghost story into a study of innocence, authority, class, secrecy, and interpretation. The novella’s power lies in its instability: every scene can be read as supernatural crisis, psychological breakdown, or some unsettling blend of both.
Why readers still return to it
More than a century after publication, The Turn of the Screw remains a touchstone for horror, literary ambiguity, and unreliable narration. It still rewards close reading because it refuses to settle into a single explanation.
Further context
First published in 1898, the novella has become one of Henry James’s most discussed and adapted works, central to modern conversations about ghost stories and narrative uncertainty.
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The Turn of the Screw
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